Raise The Flag & Sound The Cannon"Raise
The Flag & Sound The Cannon" formerly titled "Raid From Hell"
by Don Davison is the historical novel recounting the 1864 raid on St. Albans,
known as the Northernmost battle of the civil war.

Background
"The
Wide Spread and Free Soil of the Yankee" by
Don Davison. An insight into the author and his telling of the story of the raid
of 1864.Introduction
Setting the scene of the American Civil War and how the St. Albans of the 1860's
played such a key role roleExcerpts Excerpts
from the book "Raise The Flag & Sound The Cannon".

Book
Reviews

"Living
as we do in this bucolic out of the way rural setting, it is easy to assume that
History is something that happens somewhere else...

"Just
finished the book this evening. What a pleasant way to spend a couple of rainy
days.

I thoroughly enjoyed the book.

I really find a it very unique
when an author takes a historical event and historical characters and blends in
fictitious characters and fill ins.

The character John Rumsey is masterfully
blended into this event without detracting from the real life characters and the
raid itself.

I guess the biggest complement came this morning when I had
laid the book down at the breakfast table and my wife picked it up.

Keep
in mind while she loves history she could care very little about the details of
the Civil War. But after about 5 minutes of skimming the book she asked me when
I was finished to pass it on to her "because it looked very interesting".

When
I retired from banking and moved to Knowlton, Quebec, I fell in love with the
Eastern Townships and neighboring Vermont. I couldn’t wait to write a story about
the land and its people. The result was Raise The Flag & Sound The Cannon
a lively Victorian melodrama of life on both sides of the border.

Years ago I came across some
very old leather bound diaries in my father's library. The period was 1842 - 1849.
The diary started in England where a bankrupt solicitor named John Rumsey, from
High Wycombe and a member of a prominent medical family, was given transportation
to America. His wife had just died and his two children had been placed in foster
care with his sister Margaret.

The diary covered the sea voyage to New
York, the canal boats to Lake Ontario and the steamers and barges to Niagara Falls
and through to Quebec City. All the story needed was some Bartlett prints from
the period and you had the makings of a marvelous biography.

During
Rumsey's lengthy stay in Montreal he met an Irish servant who had fallen on hard
times. Rumsey tried to help him. According to his diary:

"This
being a country in which great things sometimes come from little beginnings, I
suggested to a poor Irish servant, the vending of a corn medicine. I gave him
a recipe, a fine name for it and an elaborate accound of its merits. I mixed up
the first fourteen bottles, the Queens Printer gave publicity to it and after
sending the bottles among the Canadiens, my Irish friend is now practising his
profession in the wide spread and free soil of the Yankee."

The Photo is courtesy of Peter Flood. There were
only 21 rebels. Huntley was aka Hutchison.

The
diary ended the day his lodgings and the Montreal parliament buildings burnt down
(The United Province of Canada East and West, 1849). While I finished the biography,
Banished, it was no way to end a book.

And
so began the birth of this novel, Raise The Flag & Sound The Cannon. Rumsey
was drawn to the wide spread and free soil of the Yankee, just like his friend,
we shall call Patrick O'Toole. They agreed that he should leave his begging around
Montreal behind, change his name to "Doc" Rumsey and move down to the first Yankee
town across the border, St. Albans, Vermont.

When I heard about the St.
Albans Raid, during the Civil War, it made the perfect backdrop for Rumsey's advenures
... even if it was fifteen years later.

The
following is a special telegram from the Editorial Correspondent of the Montreal
Gazette, at Quebec, dated yesterday evening: -- The Montreal Gazette, October
20, 1864

"From the Vermont and Boston Line: St. Albans, Vt., 19th.
-- A party of 20 rebel raiders entered this place this p.m. shooting and killing
the citizens. They robbed all the banks, stole 15 or 20 horses, killed 4 or 5
and wounded several. They have left town but are expected back soon with a large
force. If there is no error or exaggeration in this statement, a gross outrage
has been committed, in a peaceful and thriving village, situated on the Vermont
Central Railway, a short distance from Rouses Point, and not far from the borders
of Canada."